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| International Institute for Environment and Development |
| IIED is an independent, non-profit organization promoting sustainable patterns of world development through collaborative research, policy studies, networking and knowledge dissemination. We work to address global issues such as mining, the paper industry and food systems. |
| Website: www.iied.org |
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| Stories from Eden: Case Studies of Community-Based Wildlife Management |
| Stock Code 9012IIED, IIED 2001 62 pages Price USD 24.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
In the first phase IIED’s Evaluating Eden initiative, desk-based reviews of the status of CWM were commissioned in eight regions: West Africa, Central Africa, East Africa, Southern Africa, South Asia, South East Asia, Central America and South America. In addition two country reviews were carried out in Australia and Canada, providing an additional and valuable perspective to the project. The regional teams then went on to explore some of the issues raised in these reviews in a series of case studies based on original fieldwork. Some of the case studies are included in the various regional reports that have been published in this series. Others have been published as discussion papers by IIED or research partners. More remain unpublished and available only as “grey” literature. The purpose of this volume is to provide the reader with detailed summaries of all the Evaluating Eden case studies and to point them in the direction of further information. |
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| Forestry Tactics: Lessons from Malawi’s National Forestry Programme |
| Stock Code 9009IIED, IIED 2001 52 pages Price USD 12.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
To get anywhere in forestry these days you have to play politics. Forestry can and should improve people’s livelihoods as well as looking after trees – and this means chaning the political environment for the better. Malawi’s National Forestry Programme seeks to address this challenge. It is different to many other national forest sector strategies and programmes which exist only as fat documents and list of projects for which donors cannot be found. It seeks to make the most of existing knowledge and do something with it, to get stake-holders of all kinds negotiating, to focus on a few agreed priority areas, to hit them hard and achieve major change. it’s a big challenge and results to date have been mixed. This study tells the story of Malawi’s NFP so far – it draws out lessons from the process, identifies challenges ahead and identifies a range of practical tactics for national forest programmes which may be useful in others countries. |
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| Silver Bullet or Fools' Gold |
| Stock Code 9066IIED, IIED 2001 150 pages Price USD 28.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
Market-based approaches to environmental management are all the rage. Claims that market mechanisms can encourage environmental protection and promote greater economic efficiency, whilst saving taxpayers money, are tantalising. In the forestry sector, policymakers are widely heeding this advice and shrinking command and control systems in favour of incentive mechanisms that seek to align private enthusiasm with the public good. In some cases, governments are even promoting the creation of markets where none existed before. In others, markets are evolving of their own accord. |
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| Malawi’s National Forestry Programme: Priorities for Improving Forestry and Livelihoods |
| Stock Code 9003IIED, IIED 2001 65 pages Price USD 12.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
Malawi’s forests and trees can and should be used to contribute to poverty eradication, a thriving economy and good environmental management. The National Forestry Programme aims to help make this a reality. It consists of a set of agreed priorities-written down in this document-and an ongoing process for achieving them. Major problems stand in the way: forest degradation, excessive demands on existing fuelwood resources, and forest institutions poorly equipped for today’s policies and pressures. But the National Forestry Programme had mapped out the strategies and actions, agreed through a wide participatory process, for takcling these problems. Central government, local government, the private sector, civil socity and the international community should draw on this document to develop specific initiatives and provide the inspiration and dedication to improve forestry and livelihoods in Malawi. |
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| Raising the Stakes: Impacts of Privatisation, Certification and Partnerships in South Africa |
| Stock Code 9062IIED, IIED 2001 130 pages Price USD 18.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
Forestry is a good, if risky, business in South Africa. A handful of private companies, together with government, have dominated a commercial forestry sector based on plantations. Today, world market trends are causing companies to focus on what they do best, and to outsource everything else. Government is privatising its plantations and is pursuing policies aimed at empowering formerly marginalised people. This means that forestry is changing fast. Forest certification is one response to change, and is helping some companies who were already practicing reasonable management, to make further improvements and consolidate their reputations. Another response is to run outgrower schemes. These have been quite good for company business, and have also improved community livelihood assets, but have not yet pulled poor people out of poverty.This report is based on the findings of some 20 sub-studies and widespread consultation in South Africa. It argues that current trends in South African forestry will not miraculously combine to produce a balance of economic efficiency, environmental sustainability and social empowerment. For such a balance to be achieved, a strong vision needs to be generated and spread – involving a new pattern of ownership with an increase in the numbers of medium and small-scale players. |
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| WSSD Opinion Papers |
| Stock Code 9086IIED, IIED 2001 17 pages Price USD 0.00 |
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The UN is convening a World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in jhannesburg, South Africa, in September 2002. The Johannesburg Summit offers a major opportunity to develop understanding of these issues, and have a mature debate on practical ways to achieve progress. The Opinion Papers are a set of think pieces which aim to generate broad public interest in the issues at stake for the WSSD in 2002. They are published by IIED in collaboration with the Regional and International Networking Group (RING). |
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| Land Rights Under Pressure: Access to Resources in Southern Benin |
| Stock Code 9011IIED, IIED 2001 23 pages Price USD 19.00 |
| Ships in:1-2 days |
This report examines the diverse arrangements by which people gain access to land and trees, through a system of rental, loans, sharecropping, mortgage and guardianship contracts. The terms and conditions are subject to negotiation according to people and place. Shortage of credit, the withdrawal of government support to agriculture, and absence of legal framework are important factors in generating such institutional innovation. High levels of population pressure, peri-urban growth and shortage of productive soils have generated demand for land and palm tree stands have also become subject to market transactions. People combine several contracts to assure their subsistence needs, and diversification of incomes. Such arrangements are linked to the broader web of relations of kinship and patronage. There is, nevertheless, a move towards greater individualisation of land relations, with increasing tensions between those who control land, and those seeking land. Written ‘contracts’ between parties to such arrangements are becoming common as a means of increasing security, despite such informal local practices having no legal recognition. This paper forms part of a broader programme of research work undertaken jointly by the UK and French governments on Land Tenure and Resource Access in West Africa. |
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